Gibbons v. Balaban & Katz Corp.

242 Ill. App. 524, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 131
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 21, 1926
DocketGen. No. 31,107
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 242 Ill. App. 524 (Gibbons v. Balaban & Katz Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbons v. Balaban & Katz Corp., 242 Ill. App. 524, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 131 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment for $1,500, against defendant, following the verdict of a jury, in an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by her on the evening of May 11, 1924, at the Tivoli Theatre, a motion picture theatre, operated and controlled by defendant at No. 6325 Cottage Drove Avenue, Chicago.

Earlier in the evening plaintiff had purchased tickets of admission for herself and her minor daughter, and they, entering the theatre during the first exhibition that evening of the feature picture, were guided to seats in the balcony, alongside one of the middle aisles, by an usher who carried a flashlight. During the progress of the second exhibition they decided to leave, and arising from their seats while the theatre was in its usual darkened condition when pictures were being shown upon the screen, stepped into the aisle and walked a few steps to a stairway at one end of it. While slowly descending the stairs and “feeling” her way along, plaintiff, being ahead of her daughter, slipped or stumbled and fell to the foot of the stairs, breaking her left leg. At the foot of the stairs there was a cross-aisle, and from it there was a “tunnel” exit, just alongside the stairs and running in the opposite direction. She was taken to a hospital and treated, and did not resume her accustomed work for about four months. She incurred a physician’s bill of $350, which the evidence showed was a reasonable charge for the services, and expended $870.50 for nurses, hospital bills, etc.

Plaintiff’s declaration consisted of six counts, to which the general issue was pleaded. One of the counts, charging defendant’s negligent failure to obtain a license from the city of Chicago to operate the theatre, was withdrawn by plaintiff during the trial. Of the remaining counts one charged that defendant “negligently furnished one of the steps” of the stairway in the balcony “with uneven carpeting.” Another charged that defendant, in violation of its duty to patrons of the theatre, “negligently failed to provide reasonably adequate lighting facilities or sufficient light” on the steps of the stairway. Other counts in varying language charged defendant with negligence in both of these particulars. The sixth count, after setting out verbatim certain ordinances of the city of Chicago concerning places of amusement including motion picture theatres, charged that defendant “negligently and improperly failed to furnish the lights as required by said ordinances.” Two of said ordinances (introduced in evidence) are as follows:

“Steps shall not be permitted in aisles except as extending’ from bank to bank of seats, and no riser shall be more than eight inches in height, and no tread shall be less than ten inches in width, and wherever the rise from bank to bank of seats is less than five inches, the floor of the aisle shall be made as an inclined plane, and where steps are placed in outside aisles or corridors they shall not be isolated but shall be grouped together, and a light shall be installed so that every place where there are steps in such aisles or corridors shall be clearly lighted.”
“Where provisions are made for the lighting of steps which occur in the aisles or corridors, a light must be kept burning during the entire time that the audience is in the building and must be maintained in such a manner as to properly illuminate such steps.”

On the trial plaintiff was a witness in her own behalf, and, among other witnesses, she called her daughter, aged 13 years, J. W. Swanson, who was descending the stairway at the time of plaintiff’s fall, and J. Gr. Terry, who was then occupying a seat at the foot and to the left of the stairway. For defendant four of its employees testified. It appears from uncontradicted testimony that the stairway was constructed of concrete and had eight or more steps; that the risers thereof were 7% inches in height and the treads 18 inches in width; that the rise from bank to bank of seats was more than five inches; that' at the juncture of each riser and tread a beveled strip of wood was firmly imbedded in the concrete; that upon the stairway a mat was laid, and upon the mat a carpet, stretched and held in place by nails driven into the strips of wood; that there were no defects in the construction of the stairway; and that, at the time of plaintiff’s fall, the carpeting had not become loose, torn or worn.

As to the charge in the declaration of “uneven carpeting,” causing plaintiff’s fall, there was little or no evidence. Plaintiff testified: “I started down the stairs, and there wasn’t any light. I couldn’t see, so I felt my way the best I could. * * * When I got a few steps down something caught my heel, and I fell. * * * I had gone down three or four steps of the stairs. * * * I slipped with my right foot and in slipping I went clear down "one step, and then my heel caught and threw me down, and I fell forward.” Terry was the only witness for her who gave any testimony as to the condition of the carpet. He testified that shortly after the accident he made an examination of the lower three or four steps of the stairway and of the carpet thereon; that he did not find any holes or anything in the carpet; that right at the edge of the step the carpet felt “very roimd-”; and that he did not reach any conclusion from his examination as to why plaintiff fell. It does not appear that any of the steps which he examined was the one upon which plaintiff slipped or stumbled. And three of defendant’s witnesses testified to making examinations of the steps and carpeting shortly after the accident, and that then the carpeting was in good condition and stretched taut and smooth over the entire stairway. In our opinion, the evidence did not tend to show that plaintiff’s fall was occasioned by “uneven carpeting,” as charged.

As to the issue raised by other' counts of the declaration, whether the stairway and steps were sufficiently lighted at the time of plaintiff’s fall, the evidence was conflicting. Bailey, defendant’s chief electrician at the theatre, testified in substance that he inspected all the lights prior to the first exhibition on the evening in question, and found them in good working order; that the theatre had what is called “cove” lighting in a large dome in the center of the ceiling; that in the dome there were many alternating white, red and blue lights; that only the blue lights were kept burning during an exhibition of a picture; that in addition to the dome lights there were several lights behind pink shades along the surrounding aisles of the balcony (the nearest one being about 15 feet away from where plaintiff fell), also certain clusters or torches of blue lights on the walls; that in all the middle aisles in the balcony there were so-called “Kausal” white lights, about 5 inches above the floor, so arranged as only to east their rays downward; that they were of small power — 10 watts — and were attached to every second seat next to the aisle, including every second seat to the left of said stairway, where they were about five feet apart; that there were no such lights to the right of the stairway, because of the “tunnel” exit; but that said exit, being lighted and being surrounded by open filigree ironwork, afforded some additional light to those ascending or descending the stairway.

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242 Ill. App. 524, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbons-v-balaban-katz-corp-illappct-1926.